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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, November 25, 2004

Mickelson shoots 59 in winning Grand Slam

By Jaymes Song
Associated Press

PO'IPU BEACH, Kaua'i — Phil Mickelson ended his magical year with golf's magic number.

"I didn't hit it great today and somehow I shot 59," Phil Mickelson said after his round.

Don Ryan • Associated Press

The Masters champion shot a 13-under 59 yesterday to win the PGA Grand Slam of Golf, a two-day competition for the year's four major winners.

"It was certainly unexpected," said Mickelson, who hadn't touched a club for two weeks before the tournament. "I didn't hit it great today and somehow I shot 59. So go figure. It just all kind of came together."

Al Geiberger, Chip Beck and David Duval are the only players to shoot 59 on the PGA Tour, and Annika Sorenstam shot a 59 on the LPGA Tour. Mickelson's score will not count in the record books because the PGA Grand Slam is not an official event.

Shigeki Maruyama shot a 58 at Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, Md., during qualifying for the 2000 U.S. Open.

Mickelson barely missed a 9-foot eagle putt to the left on the last hole that would have given him a 58. He tapped in for birdie and smiled as the gallery cheered wildly.

"I just went out and just kind of played and today, the ball went in the hole," he said. "I don't really have an explanation for it."

Mickelson's 59 moved him from third place to first, with a 17-under 127 total, which tied the course record and beat PGA champion Vijay Singh by five strokes.

Lefty had 11 birdies, an eagle and no bogeys to win $400,000. He putted just 24 times, including 11 times on the front nine. It was a spectacular way to end a season Mickelson won't forget: His victory at Augusta National allowed him to shed the label of "best player never to win a major," and he went on to finish a close second in the U.S. Open, third in the British Open and tied for sixth in the PGA.

"I made everything," he said. "It was a great feeling to see the ball go in the hole. Awesome."

Phil Mickelson is greeted by daughter, Sophia, 3, after he closed with a 59 to win the PGA Grand Slam.

Don Ryan • Associated Press

Mickelson's previous competitive career low was 61 at the 2001 Greater Hartford Open. His season low was a 63 at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.

Singh, the No. 1 player in the world, shot a 66 and earned $250,000, while first-round leader Retief Goosen — the U.S. Open champ — closed with a 68 to finish at 11-under. British Open champion Todd Hamilton finished last at 1-over 145 after a 75.

"Phil outplayed everybody — or outscored everybody," Singh said. "It was incredible. After about the 12th or 15th hole, we were just watching him."

In balmy and calm conditions at the oceanside Po'ipu Bay Golf Course, Mickelson struggled off the tee at times — finding the rough, sand and gallery — but compensated with impressive short play.

He became just the third player to win the event since 1998. Last year, Jim Furyk snapped Tiger Woods' record string of five straight Grand Slam victories.

With his face caked in sunscreen, Mickelson was relaxed and loose throughout the round, chatting with his opponents and caddie Jim "Bones" McKay.

"C'mon Bones, let's see if we can make at least one putt today," Mickelson said with a smile while walking up to his short birdie attempt on No. 12. It was his seventh birdie of the day.

Mickelson, who won two tour events this year and finished third on the money list with more than $5.7 million, birdied Nos. 13 through 15 to open a commanding four-stroke lead and closed with birdies on Nos. 16 and 18.

But it was on the front nine where Mickelson surged to the top of the leaderboard. His tournament-record 28 on the front side included six birdies and an eagle. He broke Woods' mark of 30 set in 2000.

Mickelson, who had two eagles Tuesday, made four straight birdies, followed by an eagle on the 573-yard No. 6 to tie Goosen for the lead at 10 under.

His 15-foot eagle putt was set up by a 324-yard drive and a 247-yard second shot with a utility wood. Mickelson sank a 3 1/2-foot birdie putt on the next hole to take his first outright lead of the tournament.

The birdie-birdie-birdie-birdie-eagle streak was the best in tournament history. That run ended after Mickelson found two bunkers on the 374-yard No. 8, but he still managed to save par there.

Goosen, who was fighting a cold, opened with a 65 and had a stroke lead over Singh and three-stroke edge over Mickelson to start the second round.

"Didn't feel all that great today," Goosen said. "Really, in the middle of the round, (I) lost a bit of energy and really started getting a bit dizzy."